One_and_Done wrote:chicago paxsons wrote:One_and_Done wrote:I think you're confusing volume with value. Stockton's MVP vote results give us a much more objective sense of where he was rated by contemporaries.
Stockton got votes for mvp in 12 of his 19 seasons. It does give us a sense of where he was rated by contemporaries and he was rated very well. Players not rated well don't get mvp votes for more than half of their career.
Also, historically, you don't win mvp without being a high scorer, yet he consistently got votes for mvp despite not being a high scorer. Stockton's contemporaries thought
very highly of him. The only ones who seem not to is you and theonlyclutch...
He was rated by MVP votes as between 7-17, with the 7 being a huge outlier, in a far worse league. Today his resume would look more like Gobert.
Wait... First it's about whether stockton can be impactful when compared to mark jackson since jackson was 6th all time in assists. I show that stockton is on another level when it comes to all time assists, but that's just longevity, you say.
Then it's about stockton's peak as a passer. To which, i give facts as to his passing peak being as good as the best ever. Then, peak and longevity don't matter since it's just volume, you say.
Then we're onto mvp votes, which i show that his contemporaries value him enough to give him mvp votes for most of his career. Then it isn't about his contemporaries at all. His league is worse, you say. He's gobert, you say.
The amount you're changing the goalposts is laughable, but useful, since we're back to my prior argument with you, you may remember, or not since you run from facts like the plague.
I'll refresh your memory.
Your quote -
"
His dribbling and shot creation is closer to TJ McConnell than it is to Steve Nash." Just plainly, objectively untrue.
As far as his dribbling, you're confusing flash for impact. Good dribblers, like mcconnell, and even great ones don't handle the ball as often as stockton did throughout his career while averaging under 3 turnovers a game. Only the very best ones do. And let's not pretend like stealing the ball was invented after stockton retired.
And where shot creation is concerned, you don't seem to get it. Stockton is a pass-first point guard by choice. He's looking to create shots for his teammates, not himself. And when he did get open he made his shots on high efficiency. That's what made him so impactful.
Of course if you're judging him solely on selfish "i'm gonna get my shots, situation be damned" mindsets, then you won't judge him properly since you don't even understand what he's trying to do on the court. In fact, players knew exactly what he was trying to do on offense for decades and couldn't stop him.
Also your quote -
"
Stockton would likely be a top 30ish player today, but the quality of the league has improved alot. Stockton wouldn't be an all-star anymore."
This statement is an admission that you either didn't watch stockton play or didn't understand in the slightest what he was doing on the court. In a league as pick and roll dominant and spaced out as the the league is now, stockton is exactly the kind of older generation player who would thrive and would certainly be recognized for it by anyone who cares about substance and effectiveness.
I leave you with this information, do with it what you will, but desperately running from facts and being unwilling to learn from others who might have insight you don't will only hurt your ability to evaluate the players, the league, and the sport we love enough to devote so much time on this forum to.
A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.